Part 2.... See part 1 first: http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...ad.php?t=39808
The T250 Hustler was running well. You're up to your old
tricks and it's slightly quicker with the straight bars
you bought with all the other new bits to repair what would
have been a writeoff.
Time to break my older brothers record around Opahake Roundabout
in Papakura. The right angle part of the roundabout can
be taken at 90kmh. That's the record set by my brother and his mates.
I come towards the roundabout at 95kmh and get ready to drop her
over and around and a car pops out of nowhere right where I need to go.
I have to gun the bike and enter at 105kmh to get in front of
the car. No one's going to beat this speed, I think to myself as
the bike is thrown over into the tight right hander. I'm going to
make it,sweet. The right peg is biting hard and all's going well,
the rear twitches slightly as the weight goes on the older bikes,
fixed peg and then it's all over as the right handlbar digs into
the asphalt. A couple of 360's later, see's me nearly through
the door of the corner dairy.
I feel like a dick, kick the bike into life and head up the road
to survey the damage at my mates house, leaving several concerned
motorists standing in the middle of the roundabout. The sleeves
gone off my dad's rugby jacket, my right boot is paper thin, the
helmets got a few more gouges and the bikes got bent levers and
pegs and oh well. Out with the crowbar and I'm away again.
I finish work one Friday at the Papakura Courthouse and head down
the road to the Papakura tavern to have a few drinks before riding home
down Willis Road. A couple of hours later you decide you better
stop drinking and head home. It's August, cold and wet and
now dark. Get home before the plonk really hits home. Well,
I made it.
An hour later my older brother rings and asks me to pick him up
from town as it's wet and he doesn't want to walk home. I tell him
no way, I've been drinking but older brothers have a way of getting
what they want.
He told me later that after he jumped on the back, he knew we would crash
as I left the kerb with the back end spinning, motocross style down
the road. Entering Willis Road, the throttle was pinned. The T250 could do
140kmh two up with the throttle jammed wide and that was what we were
doing. A few hundred metres before our house a white Ford Falcon
pulls out of a side road from the right. I go to slow down but realise
I'll miss him anyway so pin the throttle again and plough into the unlit
trailer he was towing at 140kmh. The trailer is totalled and it spins
on the towball, writing off an Austin A40 waiting to pull out of
the opposite side road.
It was too dark to see the sky beneath my feet this time. Streetlights
seem to flash after that horrendous noise and I felt like I was flying
endlessly until I hit the ground harder than I ever have before, some 50 metres
away from the intersection. I had just missed a pole several metres back.
I must have been out for a long time. Shock is a weird thing. I didn't know
where I was but lots of people were milling around and shouting including our
parents who heard the smash over the TV hundreds of metres away. A siren could
be heard approaching. I hurt all over, badly and it seemed to be getting worse.
It was then I heard the screaming. It was my brother. They had to shoot him
up with drugs while they carted us off to Middlemore. It was a long night before
they got to me, but once again, I was lucky. Smashed collarbone, mangled left foot
with broken bones and numerous deep bruising. The chin bar on my helmet was gone.
My brothers leg had hit the side of the trailer and it had nearly been
guillotined off. He was in hospital for nearly 10 months while they managed to
save his leg. It's two inches shorter than the other but at the time,
it was real touch and go as the doctors were not sure they could save it.
The bike was sold as a wreck and the motor used in cart racing for several years
before eventually popping.
It was a while before I had another bike. In fact, I was married to that same
girlfriend at 21 and needed a cheap commuter. A Suzuki T350 became my ride for
a few years and at one stage, our only transport was a Honda SL125. But that's another
story......
Part three:
http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...ad.php?t=40711
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